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Warren, the female candidate doing best in the polls, has run a robustly populist campaign steeped in policy and aimed at structural economic change.

Are women electable? A flurry of recent reports suggests that, for many Democratic women, the answer is no. One 20-year-old told ABC News that, though she wants a woman president, “America’s just not there yet.” Washington Post reporter Dave Weigel tweeted that numerous “middle-aged women” told him “2016 showed that voters won’t elect a female president.” Polls show that defeating Donald Trump is extremely important to Democratic voters, and that the candidates they believe are most likely to beat him are white men like Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders and Beto O’Rourke.

It’s clear that Democratic voters remain haunted by the specter of Hillary Clinton’s 2016 loss. Frustratingly, we seem to have learned all the wrong lessons.

For starters, when it comes to a complex event like an election, it’s simply not true that any single factor—even gender—predetermines the outcome. In 2016, if any number of factors had gone the other way—if the economy had been just a little better, if FBI Director James Comey hadn’t reopened the email investigation at the eleventh hour, if Clinton’s campaign had poured more resources into key Midwestern states—Clinton likely would have won.

Of course, gender played a role—Clinton was subjected to a tsunami of appalling sexism from the media, Trump, slimy operatives and an army of internet trolls—but it’s surprisingly hard to prove her loss was because of gender bias. Yes, post-election studies show sexist attitudes were associated with voting for Trump, and a 2015 Gallup poll revealed 8% of Americans wouldn’t vote for a woman president—but these were mostly Republicans who would never have voted for a Democrat anyway. One study suggests Clinton’s gender could have won her more votes than it lost.

As political scientists Danny Hayes and Jennifer Lawless point out (based on non-presidential elections), women candidates are not less likely to win primary and general elections than men; the issue is that not enough run in the first place. Men are more likely to consider themselves qualified and more likely to be recruited. Perhaps there is something different about presidential elections, but as any social scientist will tell you, you can’t make broad generalizations based on a sample size of one.

Clinton’s own focus groups showed the glass ceiling argument was “the least effective positive case” for her candidacy. Instead, what voters cared about was whether the candidate could “make their own lives better.” Clinton failed to make that case and instead focused on her qualifications and biography (remember “I’m With Her”?) and the awfulness of Trump.

Things might have been different had Clinton crafted a strong economic message for working people. When pollster Stanley Greenberg tested a Democratic message attacking Trump’s character against a message “demanding big economic changes” and attacking Trump for “protecting corporate special interests,” the economic message “performed dramatically better,” including among key swing voters like white working-class women.

To their credit, several of the 2020 female candidates appear to have taken this lesson to heart and are running on platforms well to the left of Clinton’s. Sens. Kamala Harris, Kirsten Gillibrand and Elizabeth Warren are all co-sponsoring bills in support of Medicare for All, a federal jobs guarantee and a $15 nationwide minimum wage—positions Clinton avoided. Even the most moderate woman running, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, supports a $15 minimum wage. Warren, the female candidate doing best in the polls, has run a robustly populist campaign steeped in policy and aimed at structural economic change.

Warren clearly understands the moral stakes involved in the electability argument. At one candidates’ forum, she asked: “Are we going to show up for people that we didn’t actually believe in, but because we were too afraid to do anything else?” If we are too afraid to vote for women, there’s a danger of a self-fulfilling prophecy, discouraging women from running and voters from supporting them.

If the Democrats run the kind of campaign that Clinton ran (and that Biden shows every sign of running), they are likely to produce the same dismal results we saw in 2016. An obsession with electability will likely fuel the same politics of reaction and inequality that made voters cling so desperately to “electable” candidates in the first place.

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I do not elect presidents based on charisma or fine rhetoric. (once burned etc) . I go by records and past history. If there aren't any past records they aren't ready to be president, If they vote for the MIC and Corporate Interests they aren't working for us. etc.

Posted by limerick4 on 2019-06-19 21:22:18

A tad disingenuous it turns out: Not advocating for M4A...just some vague something despite having signed on to it.. And oh she who eschews Corporate PAC money just transferred some 5 million of Corporate PaC money from her senate donations to her primary donations. And is saying if she wins the nomination ...full bribes ahead. I'll take either of the two progressives in the race: Bernie or Tulsi. I like integrity and a track record.

Posted by limerick4 on 2019-06-19 21:11:11

My wife has observed that Elizabeth Warren in both stature and demeanor does not carry any of the negative stereotypes that are unconsciously assigned to women. When you watch Elizabeth Warren you don't think, "Oh, a woman running for President." She transcends that stereotype. I believe people could very well see Warren as President in much the way Britain saw Thatcher as being Prime Minister. I think if Warren wins the nomination she has a great chance of winning because she's charismatic and she has a message that resonates with rank and file voters.

Posted by Wayne Fuller on 2019-06-19 09:56:13

Once burnt, twice shy. Warren is a FORMER Republican as was Hillary. Warren's opinions and worldviews were formed in support of Ronald Reagan's economic trickle-down. As we experienced with Obama, I expect that Warren will DEMAND to work with the Republicans, so... we DIDN'T get single-payer healthcare; we got Heritage Foundation Republican Romneycare - and 14,000,000 got the shaft.

Can we afford to elect another stealth Republican whose only liberalism is cherry-picked disinformation? On policy, Obama, the Black Liberal, was liberal with words but clearly conservative on action. He opposed marriage equality saying "God is in the mix" for years until the Supreme Court stepped in. He opposed executive action to eliminate DADT. He only passed on piece of legislation, Republican ACA, when he had over six months of a filibuster-proof Senate and House! Obama supported trickle-down economics for citizens; but, the too big to fail banks/corporations got Billion$ and Billion$ in TARP I, TARP II, ACA and economic subsidies. Under Obama, the rich got richer and the poor poorer.

Warren has some great ideas; but, Democratic establishment bait and switch are still much too fresh in my mind.

Posted by ronbo on 2019-06-16 07:11:07

Warren would make a a great Attorney General or top banking regulator and then we could see if she will really go after the banksters. Its what she is good at so lets see her perform. She should leave the presidency to Bernie or Tulsi and rely on her inner commitment to reform the banksters. She could have Indian Affairs too as a combined portfolio.

Posted by uncle tungsten on 2019-06-15 00:09:46

Lets be honest the only person Trump could likely beat would be creepy Joe Biden, so yeah, anyone but Biden can beat trump and that includes Warren, though without doubt, Tulsi and Bernie 2020 would be by far the easiest win for Democrats, just so sell able, like right out of a Hollywood script, both in terms of personality but also where it counts in policy.

They really need to work togethor on the primaries and allow the public to decide who will lead, Bernie or Tulsi.